ARE WE ALONE?
Are We Alone? By Jeanne McCartin August 26, 2007 UFO’s Aliens? Intelligent life beyond Earth? The truth may be out there, but some locals still aren’t comfortable talking about what they believe We write about them, talk about them, make movies and films on the subject, but admit you believe there’s intelligent life on other planets? Well, maybe privately. More than two dozen people who were asked their opinion were more than willing to talk on the matter – but not on the record. What’s interesting is, all but two believe. And to the last one, the believers felt it was the rational response. To imagine all universes void of life with the exception of earth seemed a ludicrous concept. But on the record? Thanks, but no thanks. They’d rather the neighbors didn’t know. Only one person admitted to a sighting.
She was excited to talk about the experience – off the
record. The East
Kingston resident saw her UFO on Route 108 between With decades to think about it, does she still think it was an alien space ship she spotted? “Sometimes I question it. ...It was a long time ago. I’ll never really know what it was, will I? But it wasn’t a plane, and it was definitely different. I’ve never seen anything act like it – holding steady, and then gone. ...Yes I guess I did see what I thought I saw.” So aliens are a given? “They would have to be wouldn’t they? Not little green things. But I do believe in intelligent life, other than us. It only makes sense.” There it is – the oft-repeated comment; the one few would admit to on record. And yet, a 2006 poll conducted by the Center
for Survey and Research Analysis at the Andrea Ardito of There are unexplainable occurrences in this
world that get a mind to thinking,” says Arditio.
“I guess I would say that I would like to believe there is
life outside...earth.
And I’d like to think (aliens) are benevolent.
But after reading the story about the Hills, I think twice
about driving dark back roads in Scott Seely of “He was the authority of a UFO project, Project Blue Book. Their mission was to investigate UFOs.” UFO, Seely explains, refers to all unidentified flying objects, “not necessarily something that lands in a field with little creatures coming out of it.” And yes, Hynek believed in the possibility of intelligent life on other planets, an idea Seely shares. “I think most astronomers do. ...It just makes scientific sense with the amount of stars and planets...some with atmospheres that can support carbon life.” According to the New Hampshire Mutual UFO
Network (MUFON) Web site, there have been hundreds of sightings
reported in There are a few reports listed for Melissa Scott of While she may ponder their existence, her own belief regarding is barely one side of the fence. “Are there aliens? That’s a very difficult question. I have no evidence either way. We’ve never been contacted by any,” she says. “But on the other hand, it seems presumptuous not to think, that in this massive universe, intelligent life hasn’t evolved on any planet beside this one.” “I think (believing) really depends on how optimistic you feel about the universe to tell you the truth,” she says. “There is a Drake Equation that lets you figure out what you think about the chances that there is intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. And if you are at all optimistic when you plug in the numbers, then the answer is of course yes. ...If you’re a pessimist...the answer is almost vanishing small.” “It’s a fascinating question – but there is no data. No sensible data for either side of it.” And abductions? “I don’t want to get into that one.” But Kathleen Marden does. Marden is the niece of Betty and Barney Hill. She’s written a book “Captured! The Betty and Barney Hill UFO Experience,” based on her own research of the case. “I don’t like to use the word ‘believe.’ To me that connotes the idea that it’s a belief such as a religious one. I think there is sufficient evidence that some people, at least, have been abducted.” “I want to qualify, ‘some’ – at least one
possibly more.” To her
mind, the most credible abductions occurred in the 1960s and ‘70s.
“There was evidence that something had happened.”
In addition to the Hills, there was the Travis Walton
incident in the White Mountains of Arizona, and another with Calvin
Parker and Charles Hickson, In addition to investigating her own family’s claim, Marden has worked with Mutual UFO Society (MUFON), and was an investigator of UFO sighting cases. And she still has people reach out to her who believe they’ve been abducted. “You can’t simply believe. ...There has to be an extensive investigation.” And that can be financially prohibitive. If there are claims of in-home nocturnal abductions, a more common form these days, investigations require security cameras throughout an individual’s home. Lie detector tests are commonly used in all sightings and abduction investigations. “You want physical and circumstantial evidence, radar reports from the Air Force, and multiple witnesses that are credible.” As for those who don’t believe, she says they’re entitled to their opinion. “But I’d like to know they’d done the research, not just gone to some special Web site or the site of a ...person whose job it is to debunk every claim out of the ordinary.” Seely will stick with his hunch. Something’s out there. “Earth may be unique in some respects. But this kind of scientific development could occur thousands of times all over the universe – in different galaxies,” he says. “I think it’s a fascinating and intriguing idea, and I hope someday it will be proven and that there will be interplanetary communication. It’s an exciting prospect.” |
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